Dining Advice, Tips, Recommendations, and News

  • Share:
  • Send to StumbleUpon
  • Send to Facebook
  • Send to del.icio.us
  • Send to digg

Snapshots from Chile: Hot Dogs and Sandwiches at Rapa Nui

From April 13 to 19, I traveled around Chile with two other American food journalists on a culinary media trip. Here's another snapshot from that week. —Robyn Lee

200805001-rapanui1.jpg

200805001-rapanui2.jpgJust like my group's visit to a café con piernas, obtaining a completo, a Chilean hot dog impossibly overloaded with condiments, wasn't part of our itinerary. But everyone knew I wanted one. Because during the second half of our trip I would not-so-subtly remind them with each passing completo-less day that I still wanted a completo.

My last day in Chile started at Rapa Nui, a long-established restaurant in Temuco that, as far as I know, has nothing to do with being named after the indigenous name for Easter Island, but offered everything I could ever want: hot dogs and sandwiches. Looking around the dining room, we noticed other customers—from a small, young boy to an old woman—ringing in the morning with breakfast completos. We followed suit.

The Completo

200805001-rapanui-completo.jpg

The completo came on its own special clear plastic tray with two ridges to elevate the hot dog for ease of handling and to ensure the integrity of the hot dog's upright position. Considering that the hot dog was densely packed in a bun with sauerkraut and impressively topped with a massive amount of avocado mash, a smattering of chopped tomato, a bit of mustard and hot aji sauce, and, most importantly, a heart-stopping splodge of creamy, mild-flavored, homemade mayonnaise, an overturned hot dog could've resulted in a disastrous mess. Although the actual amount of mayonnaise was probably less than what it appeared to be, we estimated that there was one-fourth to a half cup of mayonnaise per hot dog. Don't even bother calculating the nutritional value of this thing; nobody wants to know.

200805001-rapanui-completoinnards.jpg

It's not a hot dog as much as a bun (which wasn't of the light and fluffy American sort, but a bread that was substantial enough to hold up to the gazillion ingredients inside of it) filled with condiments suffocating a skinny log of meat. I would've preferred more hot dog matter to even out the sauerkraut (maybe two hot dogs in one bun, unless Chileans see that as heresy against the completo), but otherwise, I enjoyed it muchly, relishing every mayonnaise-filled bite. I almost never eat hot dogs in New York City, but if more places could pull this off, I'd increase the frequency of my hot dog-eating ways.

Lomito Rapa Nui

200805001-rapanui-pork.jpg

The Lomito Rapa Nui, the restaurant's house sandwich, packed thinly sliced pork loin, sauerkraut, "salsa americana" (chopped pickles), tomato slices, mustard, aji, and a generous helping of mayonnaise between the halves of a hefty, crusty round bun.

200805001-rapanui-porkinnards.jpg

Alas, my favorite meat had failed me; we found that the pork sadly lacked in taste. It wasn't bad, but the condiments outshone the pork. Like the hot dog, it seemed like the non-meat parts were key, with meat playing a supporting role.

Chacarero

200805001-rapanui-beef.jpg

The chacarero was the better sandwich, with sliced beef, tomatoes, mayonnaise, and a big honkin' mass of steamed green beans.

200805001-rapanui-beefinnards.jpg

The beef was juicier and more flavorful than the pork. As for the green beans, I found them a nice change of green vegetable matter from the more typically found leafy greens. They didn't provide any crunch factor, but they gave a bit of green beany sweetness and the false sense of eating something nutritious even though it was topped with a gob of mayonnaise.

Chile knows the key to making awesome hot dogs and sandwiches, that key being mayonnaise. Lots. And lots. Of mayonnaise. And avocado. Or, more simply, lots of creamy, fatty goodness. Why we can't bring more of that magic over here, I don't know. Perhaps we need more Chileans, but after spending a week in Chile, I can see why they don't want to leave their country. Sigh.

Related
Serious Sandwiches: Churrasco Completo

Rapa Nui

Address: Aldunate 415, Temuco, Chile
Phone: (45) 910727

12 Comments:

Beans in sandwiches...who knew?

I've never run across green beans on a sandwich before, but now that you've brought it to my attention, I'm thinking "Why not?" I like my sandwiches loaded down with fresh stuff, so I'd give the beans a shot.

I like the reference to chopped pickles as "salsa americana."

These sandwiches are.....sexy.

Lomito's so nice when my mom-in-law makes it at home! But this little piece of pork doesn't really look nice to me. Maybe it's the unusual amount of mayonnaise dumped on top of the veggies. But I actually have to admit that I like lomito because of all the vegetables on the sandwich, not especially because of the pork.

That cross section of the completo both excited and repulsed me. It looked delicious, yet instantaneously fatal. I am so impressed by your eating on this trip. Impressed and envious.

Reminds me of Nicaraguan hot dogs in the meat:condiment ration. Similarly shrimpy meatsticks in buns, Loaded Down with as much shredded cabbage as they can cram on there, plus onions, crema or mayo, ketchup, mustard, etc. But for about 40 cents, an excellent afternoon snack.

@MelsDiner: Green beans are awesome! Remove the meat and you've got yourself a rather tasty vegetarian-friendly sandwich. :) (One of my friends asked for this when we went to a Chilean place in NYC, heh!)

@C: I felt like I gained 5 pounds on the first day of the trip. It was kind of scary..."how did I eat that much food?"

@veggiesattva: 40 cents?! Holy crap. I'd eat a few of those.

I'm torn. That is WAAAAAAAAAAAAAAY too much mayo for me (I like a paper-thin layer on each slice of bread), but the other stuff looks delicious. Have you ever had a potato salad sandwich? They are very popular in Japan, especially at 7-11s. Now that's one mayo-y sandwich I can get behind...

That would be something I'd try only once because it looks interesting and I don't typically care for mayonnaise. But the green beans on the sandwich sounds very good.

The beef sandwiches look AMAZING! They sorta remind me of Vietnamese sandwiches. There is a great place in Williamsburg that makes them really well.

@minoric: It looks like too much, but I swear...it's not!

...Okay, I really love mayo.

Haven't had a potato salad sandwich before! If only I were in Japan. :(

Add a comment:

Comments can take up to a minute to appear - please be patient!

Previewing your comment:

 

HTML Hints

Some HTML is OK: <a href="URL">link</a>, <strong>strong</strong>, <em>em</em>

Comment Guidelines

Post whatever you want, just keep it seriously about eats, seriously. We reserve the right to delete off-topic or inflammatory comments. Learn more at our Comment Policy page.

If you see something not so nice, please, report an inappropriate comment.

Sponsored Link

Recipe

Mango Bean Salad

Fresh fruit and hearty beans make a refreshing side for our Morningstar Farms® Southwestern Style Veggie Cakes.
Get this recipe »